Frequent walks gave Fischer’s brain a boost
Saturday, July 9, 2011 03:05 AM
Basic Chess Features

Many stories concern Bobby Fischer’s fondness for walking.

On three or four occasions during the 1960s, I met him by chance as he perambulated around New York. He was always friendly and eager to talk.

Late-night walks often took him to chess hangouts such as the Chess and Checker Club of New York, where he would frequently take on a player of master strength, offering up to 15-1 odds to his opponent and the gathering kibitzers.

He seemed to tremendously enjoy the fun and hilarity provoked by the impromptu exhibitions.

A champion boxer once described to me the difficulty of keeping up with Fischer’s walking tours. There seems to have been a method to his locomotion.

Rae Pica, author of A Running Start, wrote: “Movement increases blood vessels that allow for the delivery of oxygen, water and glucose to the brain. And this can’t help but optimize brain performance.”

Nocturnal walks – a wonderful combination of darkness and contemplation – offered Fischer a private laboratory to explore chess moves.

More here.

Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
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